Gareth Magennis wrote:
> "Chris Hornbeck" <chrishornbeckremovethis@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:2bga04l97k3kg4mbk9ap6osfhfve0dnu5u@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 21:48:51 GMT, "Gareth Magennis"
>> <sound.service@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>
>>> "Eeyore" <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>>> news:4804F94B.8E7C0BE4@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>> "Green Xenon [Radium]" wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I am diagnosed with Asperger's.
>>>> So, come one, why not join in and ask some genuinely interesting
>>>> questions
>>>> instead of obsessive ones ?
>>> Because people with Asberger's can't do that. They're kind of stuck
with
>>> it.
>> Boo ****ing Hoo. "I can't help myself that I'm crossposting
>> to rec.audio.opinion. I can't help myself that I need to
>> take a rifle and shoot some strangers. I can't help myself
>> that I post but I don't read responses."
>>
>> Bull****. Is this a little girl or a grown man? Bull. ****.
>> This stinks on ice.
>>
>> Chris Hornbeck
>
>
>
> Well, either Radium does have Asberger's, or he is a troll pretending
to.
> If anyone can cite any evidence to sup****t one or the other posibilities
> than please post it here.
>
> If trolls annoy you, don't feed them. What is to gain from getting
angry by
> posting a reply? (Take some responsibility for the fact that it is YOU
who
> are getting angry, not anyone MAKING you angry)
>
> If Asberger's sufferers annoy you, then don't reply to them either.
Telling
> such a person not to behave like someone with Asberger's is as
ridiculous as
> telling a depressed person to cheer up for God's sake, or an Agrophobic
to
> just get out of the house more.
>
>
>
> Gareth.
>
>
Gareth, there is a lot of help available for Aspies, both online and
live. That's not to say that Aspies need to be 'cured'; but just that
they (We? Lately I've been wondering...) live in a NT (NeuroTypical)
world and need to interface with it in a meaningful way.
Simply indulging their excesses does little to accomplish that. Many
Aspies, once they have been diagnosed--either self or
professionally--develop coping strategies which allow them greater
freedom, and chance for success in the world at large.
jak


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